Slovak PM Robert Fico makes first public appearance since assassination attempt
The attack has deepened the polarisation in the central European country of 5.4 million.

Fico’s leftist-nationalist government has quickly shifted policy since taking power last year, including changing some criminal laws and cancelling a special prosecutor’s office, transforming the public broadcaster, and halting state military aid to Ukraine.
Opposition parties have battled Fico’s government over the changes while the European Union has watched for any damage to rule of law or media freedoms.
Fico on Friday hit back against progressive and liberal ideologies he said were “spreading like cancer” and hurting the country.
“I don’t want Slovakia to be among the countries that make a caricature of Western civilisation,” he said.
In a video message posted on Facebook in early June, Fico had called his attacker an opposition activist, but said he felt no hatred toward him and would not seek damages.
His attacker, a man identified by prosecutors as 71-year old Juraj C., was detained and charged with attempted premeditated murder. Prosecutors this week upgraded the case to a terrorist attack.
The detained man has, according to court documents, said he had wanted to hurt the prime minister, but not kill him, because he disagreed with the government’s policies.

Fico has faced criticism for views leaning toward Russia while his foreign minister has met his Russian counterpart despite EU officials avoiding high-level meetings with Moscow.
Fico, in his first live speech since the attack, reiterated a call for peace talks in the Ukraine-Russia conflict and said he would have joined Orban on his visit to Moscow if health allowed.
Orban faced outcry from some EU leaders for his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
“There are not enough, I repeat, not enough peace talks, peace initiatives,” Fico said.